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<blockquote data-quote="GrahamWills" data-source="post: 8254744" data-attributes="member: 75787"><p>Simply the plain English definition "a manner of doing something". My observation is that in most people-based data there is a large group -- often the largest group -- of people who just don't care that much about all the details that we discuss and just like doing the thing. </p><p></p><p>The blog does indeed try and create groupings that define style -- my observation is simply that the biggest grouping of people is often people who don't care about grouping.</p><p></p><p>If we take film-going as an analogy, there are people who strongly prefer comedy, or like war movies, but there's a big group of people for whom going to pretty much any movie is fun because they get to hang out with friends, enjoy their company, some food, some emotive reactions, and the details of the movie they are watching are secondary to that. I'd expect role-playing to be similar. Looking at the blog's list of genres, none of them seem to describe me or my friends well. We've played combat-focused 4E one day, Kids on Bikes the next; I ran a campaign that alternated between Everyday and Rolemaster rules. Trying to assign a specific culture to that just doesn't make sense. The best "culture" would be "people who like to play pretty much anything with friends".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GrahamWills, post: 8254744, member: 75787"] Simply the plain English definition "a manner of doing something". My observation is that in most people-based data there is a large group -- often the largest group -- of people who just don't care that much about all the details that we discuss and just like doing the thing. The blog does indeed try and create groupings that define style -- my observation is simply that the biggest grouping of people is often people who don't care about grouping. If we take film-going as an analogy, there are people who strongly prefer comedy, or like war movies, but there's a big group of people for whom going to pretty much any movie is fun because they get to hang out with friends, enjoy their company, some food, some emotive reactions, and the details of the movie they are watching are secondary to that. I'd expect role-playing to be similar. Looking at the blog's list of genres, none of them seem to describe me or my friends well. We've played combat-focused 4E one day, Kids on Bikes the next; I ran a campaign that alternated between Everyday and Rolemaster rules. Trying to assign a specific culture to that just doesn't make sense. The best "culture" would be "people who like to play pretty much anything with friends". [/QUOTE]
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